HII Returns Newport News Shipbuilding’s Name on Its Gantry Crane (USA)

HII Returns Newport News Shipbuilding's Name on Its Gantry Crane

Huntington Ingalls Industries has returned Newport News Shipbuilding’s name to its perch 233 feet above the shipyard. After more than 10 years, 250 gallons of primer and 260 gallons of paint, the Newport News Shipbuilding name once again sprawls across the downtown Newport News skyline on the girder of the shipyard’s 1,050-metric ton gantry crane.

This is a proud moment, not only for the 20,000 shipbuilders at Newport News Shipbuilding, but for the community we’ve been a part of for the last 125 years,” said Matt Mulherin, corporate vice president and NNS president. “Returning to the Newport News Shipbuilding name and logo under Huntington Ingalls Industries reinforces our heritage and our continued commitment to quality, customer focus and building the world’s best military ships.”

Shipbuilders from the shipyard’s Facilities and Waterfront Support organization and painting contractors contributed hundreds of man-hours to the 33,000 square foot paint job. Shipbuilders provided all the planning and support activities, including installing the paint scaffolding hundreds of feet in the air. Snap Contracting of Hampton painted the crane girder in the traditional “Northyard Crane Blue” paint color. Sign Media of Hampton painted the logos and lettering, which included 96 paper templates to lay out the artwork. At 360 feet long, “Newport News Shipbuilding” is painted “Blueblood” blue. NNS’s spear and gear and the HII logos are 28 feet tall in the colors “Blueblood” and “Honeycomb.”

Other facts about the 1,050-Metric Ton “Big Blue” Crane:

It is the largest Goliath gantry crane in the Western Hemisphere

It was built in 1976 by the German company KRUPP and was part of the North Yard expansion project

The crane’s capacity was upgraded in 2008 from 900 metric tons to 1,050 metric tons

“Big Blue” has assisted in the construction of every aircraft carrier since USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71)

The crane is 233 feet tall with a 540-foot span from leg to leg

Dead weight of the crane is more than 4,600 metric tons (10 million pounds)

Each hoist (three total) has more than one mile of 1-5/8-inch diameter wire rope

At full lift capacity, “Big Blue” uses enough power for 114 homes

Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) designs, builds and maintains nuclear and non-nuclear ships for the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard and provides after-market services for military ships around the globe. For more than a century, HII has built more ships in more ship classes than any other U.S. naval shipbuilder. Employing nearly 38,000 in Virginia, Mississippi, Louisiana and California, its primary business divisions are Newport News Shipbuilding and Ingalls Shipbuilding.

[mappress]

Source: huntingtoningalls, November 9, 2011